Giveaways

Free Stuff Fridays

Free Stuff Fridays

I am a little bit late posting this. Please accept my apologies; I got busy with other things and forgot all about it! Because I am late posting it, I will extend the giveaway until tomorrow at noon.

This week’s Free Stuff Fridays sponsor is Lewis & Roth. They are offering fifteen prizes, each of which will include four books! It is an Alexander Strauch prize pack.

strauch.jpg

Each of the fifteen winners will receive a copy of each of these titles: Love or Die, Leading with Love, Hospitality Commands and Agape Leadership. Whether you are a church leader or not, these books will be a blessing and an encouragement to you. Love or Die happens to be one of my favorite books of 2008 and is one that blessed me deeply. In my review I said, “I know beyond any shadow of doubt that many of our churches—and perhaps your church, and perhaps mine—would hear this same rebuke from the lips of the one who walks among us unseen, but seeing all. This passage from Scripture is a gift from God that we might “hear what the Spirit says to the churches.” Though Love or Die is but a short book, it is an excellent one and I commend it to you. It would not be out of place in any church library or personal collection.”

Also, if you wish to buy anything from the Lewis & Roth store, you can use the coupon code “challies” to get 15% off your order.

Rules: You may only enter the draw once. Simply fill out your name and email address to enter the draw. As soon as the winners have been chosen, all names and addresses will be immediately and permanently erased. The giveaway closes tomorrow at noon.

Free Stuff Fridays

Free Stuff Fridays

This week’s sponsor is Crossway Books. Crossway is offering five prizes, each of which will include three books by Sam Storms: More Precious than Gold, Hope of Glory and To the One Who Conquers. These are the three titles in a series of devotional books. One focuses on Colossians, one on Revelation 2-3 and the other on the Psalms.

In More Precious Than Gold, Storms combines years of life experience and his biblical and theological training to bring readers 50 brief, daily meditations that are both stylistically accessible and theologically substantive. Each meditation includes a historical or theological reflection on the psalm in context, a story that brings it alive, and creative tools to support the key idea. Storms also interweaves the words of such luminaries as Charles Spurgeon, Jonathan Edwards, and John Piper to help readers better understand the concepts that are featured throughout Psalms: worship, prayer, joy, forgiveness, steadfast love, mercy, sin’s consequences, the law of the Lord, and our relationship with our enemies.

Books by Sam Storms

Rules: You may only enter once. Simply fill out your name and email address to enter the draw. As soon as the winners have been chosen, all names and addresses will be immediately and permanently erased. The giveaway closes tonight at midnight.

Free Stuff Fridays

Free Stuff Fridays

This week Evangelical Press, celebrating the opening of their US store, is offering five copies of Fearless Pilgrim: The Life and Times of John Bunyan. You may recognize the title from a review I wrote just a couple of weeks ago. I said there that “This is a fantastic biography—one that is well-written and nicely paced. It could so easily have bogged down through discussions of Bunyan’s voluminous writings, but Cook does an excellent job of saying only what needs to be said and allowing the book to move along. One endorsement of this book suggests that it is Cook’s best book yet. Though I have not read all of her works, I’d be inclined to agree. This is a very good biography and one that is worthy of a place on your bookshelf.”

Fearless Pilgrim

Also, anyone shopping at the Evangelical Press store may be interested in using a special coupon code. If you enter the code “Challies” upon checkout, you will receive $5 off any order. This code is valid from today until March 20.

In the meantime, fill out your name and email address to enter the draw. As soon as the winners have been chosen, all names and addresses will be immediately and permanently erased. The giveaway closes tonight at midnight.

Free Stuff Fridays

Free Stuff Fridays

This week Ligonier Ministries is offering 50 (count ‘em 50!) prizes. Each of the 50 (!) winners will be given a year-long subscription to Tabletalk Magazine (or a subscription for a friend, neighbor, family member if the winner happens to already be a subscriber).

Tabletalk is a tool that helps you grow in your knowledge of God and in your love for His Son and His people. Each month is packed with more than 60 pages of focused, practical Bible study and insightful commentary by today’s top Christian thinkers. Over the years, Tabletalk has been recognized for its excellence through several awards. Today, people all over the world read Tabletalk on a daily basis. The magazine is regularly found in seminary libraries and churches throughout the country. Many credit Tabletalk with helping them maintain a solid life of study and prayer.

Click here If you would like to view a sample issue.

Please note that it will take 6-8 weeks for your first issue to arrive. That means that it will arrive just a little bit too late for you to see my Tabletalk debut. But no matter.

Tabletalk

Rules: You may enter only once. The giveaway closes tonight at midnight.

Notes: You must provide your mailing address (or the address of the person to whom you would like to give your subscription) in order to enter the giveaway. This information will be stored securely for the duration of the giveaway. As soon as the winners have been selected, their names and mailing addresses will be forwarded to Ligonier Ministries. All other information will be immediately and permanently erased.

Enter here:


Free Stuff Fridays

Calvin CoverWe’re going to try something new around here. For the next few weeks, at least, I’m going to make Fridays a giveaway day. Check in Friday mornings and there will be something to win.

Today I’m giving away five copies of a great little book on John Calvin (courtesy of Reformation Heritage Books). “In this attractive volume, Simonetta Carr introduces young readers to the life, thought, and work of one of the most famous Reformers of the Christian church. She tells about the life of John Calvin from his birth to his death, placing him within the troubled context of the sixteenth century. She also introduces Calvin’s writings in a way that children will desire to know more about his ministry and influence.”

Calvin

Calvin

To enter the draw, all you need to do is send along your name and email address using the form below. I’ll accept entries until midnight tonight. At that point I’ll randomly choose the winners, notify them via email, and then erase all the information (thus assuring you that you will never be spammed or otherwise annoyed).

The only rule is: only one entry per person. Please.

{Entry Form Removed After Contest Closed}

Book Contest: J.I. Packer Edition

Since last week’s little contests went over well, I thought I’d try another one. The style is similar—here we have a list of 21 quotes. Each of these quotes are endorsements for a book and each is written by J.I. Packer (quite the prolific reader and endorser!). As I am flying to Vancouver for a meeting tomorrow, it seemed to me that Packer would be an appropriate subject.

Your task is to send me a list of the titles and author(s) for each of these books. Send your list (partial or full if you can figure out all of them). Whoever gets the most right will win a $50 gift certificate for Westminster Books. Should two or more correctly identify all of the books, I will randomly select a winner from among them. Where the book’s author or title is explicitly mentioned in the endorsement, I have replaced them with [Author] or [Title].

Now I know that you can probably Google most or all of these—and that is not against the rules. By why not at least think about them first and see if you can figure them out. There is no advantage to being the first to submit your answers, so don’t feel you need to hurry. Just get your answers in before 12 PM Eastern tomorrow and I will announce a winner as soon as I can get to a computer and tally it all up.

Submit your answers here.

  1. The healthy biblical realism of this study in Christian motivation comes as a breath of fresh air. Jonathan Edwards, whose ghost walks through most of [Author]’s pages, would be delighted with his disciple.”

  2. This extended declaration and defence of the penal substitutionary view of Christ’s atoning death responds to a plethora of current criticisms, many of them in-house, with a thoroughness and effectiveness that is without parallel anywhere. The book’s existence shows that a British evangelical theology which exegetically, systematically, apologetically and pastorally can take on the world is in process of coming to birth. I hail this treatise as an epoch-making tour de force, and hopefully a sign of many more good things to come.”

  3. [Author]’s insight into human nature, divine grace, and Christian life yields a better blueprint for marriage than the self-absorbed rule-ridden role-play with which too many stop short. This is a wise and liberating book for struggling couples—and many others, too.”

  4. In this crowded world of Bible versions [Author]’s blend of accurate scholarship and vivid idiom make this rendering both distinctive and distinguished. [Title] catches the logical flow, personal energy, and imaginative overtones of the original very well indeed.”

  5. It is a privilege to commend so sensible, clear and fruitful an overview of basic Christian belief.”

  6. [Author]’s disarming introduction to personal faith is a modern classic. Long life to it!”

  7. Following in the footsteps of the late great Francis Schaeffer, two leading scholars here give wide-ranging guidance on how today we may show we are Christians by our love.”

  8. Brilliant [Author] is one of God’s best gifts to our decaying Western church, and would-be learners and teachers of the faith will gain hugely from these fascinating pages.”

  9. Clear, well informed, up to date, and firmly anchored in the mainstream of Christian wisdom. Oriented to the church, the Holy Spirit, and the future in a biblically proper way, this work transcends the rationalism and individualism that mar some of its predecessors…An outstanding achievement.”

  10. [Author] rises grandly to the challenge of the greatest of all themes. All the qualities that we expect of him—biblical precision, thoughtfulness and thoroughness, order and method, moral alertness and the measured tread, balanced judgment and practical passion—are here in fullest evidence. This, more than any book he has written, is his masterpiece.”

  11. [Author]’s offensive against Arminian-type views of election among evangelicals is a very solid piece of work. The thoroughness of its arguments gives it conclusive force.”

  12. Here is a modern reader’s edition of a classic Puritan work by a classic Puritan author. It is a powerful Trinitarian profiling from Scripture of the truth that fellowship with God is and must ever be the inside story of the real Christian’s life. The editing is excellent, and the twenty-seven-page introduction and the thirty-page analytical outline make the treatise accessible, even inviting, to any who, with Richard Baxter, see “heart-work” as the essence of Christianity. [Author] is a profound teacher on all aspects of spiritual life, and it is a joy to welcome this reappearance of one of his finest achievements.”

  13. Careful, thorough, wise, and to my mind, convincing.”

  14. Here is the quintessence of the gospel, the new wine of God’s kingdom at its purest for us today! Read, mark, learn, and inwardly digest [title].”

  15. Thought is packed tight in this masterful survey of the covenantal frame of God’s self-disclosure in Scripture, and for serious students it is a winner.”

  16. This 25-year-old classic still makes one think, pray, get real with God, repent, and find joy in wise obedience more effectively than any other book I know. I cannot recommend it too highly.”

  17. [A] sober, encouraging book…The two sides of the author, the biblical scholar who reads, thinks, and misses no detail and the pastoral teacher who understands people, feels with them, and cares for them, combine here to give us a treatment of suffering under God’s sovereignty which is outstandingly accurate, wise, and helpful. All who follow the author’s fast-flowing argument will find their heads cleared and their hearts strengthened.”

  18. Honest historian [Author] informs us straightaway that he views the Christian story through the lenses of Protestant, Reformed, evangelical, baptistic, free-church spectacles. His telling of the tale, journalistic in style while scholarly in substance, then proves his point. You will find this book clarifying and invigorating.”

  19. [Author]’s exciting study…is a major step forward in the reappraisal of Puritanism…no student in the Puritan field can excuse themselves from reckoning with this important contribution.”

  20. I commend this eager and warm-hearted tour guide to the Book of Common Prayer with much enthusiasm …”

  21. This racy little book open up a far-reaching theme. With entertaining insight [Author] looks into the attitudes, alliances, and strategies that today’s state of affairs requires of believers. Catholics, Protestants, and Orthodox alike need to ponder [Author]’s vision of things—preferably, in discussion together. What if he is right?”

Contest Wrap-Up

Two days, two contests. Both were a lot of fun, I think, and I hope to do a few more in the same vein. I started doing a bit of research yesterday on one that I’m sure is going to be unique and hopefully a little more difficult than the last ones.

Book Cover Contest

I thought I was being tricky yesterday with the “Book Cover” contest, but it seems that many people had little difficulty correctly identifying each of the book covers. Fully 54 people submitted a correct list. Those who got tripped up, tended to miss #2 or #19. Of those who got them all correct, I randomly selected Brett Maragni as the winner of the gift certificate.

Here are the answers:

  1. Don’t Waste Your Life by John Piper
  2. Total Truth by Nancy Pearcey
  3. Truth War by John MacArthur
  4. The Gagging of God by DA Carson
  5. Systematic Theology by Wayne Grudem
  6. George Whitefield by Arnold Dallimore
  7. Reason for God by Tim Keller
  8. Stop Dating the Church by Joshua Harris
  9. Radical Reformission by Mark Driscoll
  10. The Purpose Driven Life by Rick Warren
  11. Your Best Life Now by Joel Osteen
  12. The Shack by William P. Young
  13. Do Hard Things by Alex Harris, Bret Harris and Chuck Norris
  14. 9 Marks of a Healthy Church by Mark Dever
  15. The Irresistible Revolution by Shane Clairborne
  16. The Cross-Centered Life by CJ Mahaney
  17. Jonathan Edwards: A Life by George Marsden
  18. The Sacred Romance by John Eldredge
  19. Generous Orthodoxy by Brian McLaren
  20. Twelve Ordinary Men by John MacArthur

Bonus 1. Letter to a Christian Nation by Sam Harris
Bonus 2. God is Not Great by Christopher Hitchens
Bonus 3. The God Delusion by Richard Hawkins

First Three Lines

Here are the answers for the “First Three Lines” contest in case you didn’t notice that I posted them in a comment. Derek Brown was selected as the winner, one of 34 people who answered all of them correctly.

  1. The Cross of Christ, John R. W. Stott
  2. Knowing God, J. I. Packer
  3. Desiring God, John Piper
  4. The Pursuit of Holiness, Jerry Bridges
  5. Blue Like Jazz, Donald Miller
  6. Wild At Heart, John Eldredge
  7. True Spirituality, Dr. Francis A. Schaeffer
  8. Ashamed of the Gospel, John MacArthur
  9. Humility: True Greatness, C. J. Mahaney
  10. I Kissed Dating Goodbye, Joshua Harris
  11. Heaven, Randy Alcorn
  12. 90 Minutes in Heaven, Don Piper
  13. Chosen By God, R. C. Sproul
  14. Decision Making and the Will of God, Garry Friesen
  15. Velvet Elvis: Repainting the Christian Faith, Rob Bell

Book Covers: A New Contest

Yesterday we had some fun with the First Three Lines contest. I had anticipated low participation and low accuracy. It turns out that a whole lot of people sent in their answers and fully 34 of them got all of the answers correct. Most of these confessed to having harnessed the power of Google to do so. I knew that Google would come into play but hadn’t thought that all fifteen quotes were available out there. Lesson learned! However, since I did not forbid Google use, it was all above board. From the 34 winners I used a random integer generator to choose the sixth one I received—and that belonged to Derek Brown. He wins the $50 gift certificate to Westminster Books. If you’d like to check your answers, I’ve posted them in a comment in that article.

Today I will try to even the field a little bit. This contest is a little more Google-proof. You may use Google, but I think you’ll find it more difficult to do so successfully.

Here we have a selection of book covers—not full covers, but merely a piece from each of them. There are twenty covers and three bonuses at the end. Your task is to identify the title of each of the books and to send me an email with your answers (please do not post answers in the comments). Please give the email a subject of “Book Cover Contest.” Once again, the person who correctly identifies the greatest number will win (and, if there are multiple winners, one will be chosen randomly). I do not think we’ll have so many people correctly identify all of them, so send along even a partial list if that’s the best you can do!

The prize is a $50 gift certificate for Westminster Books and the contest will close tomorrow at 9 AM. Have fun!





















And, just for kicks, here are three bonus books. These are general market titles rather than Christian titles.




The First Three Lines: A Contest

Yesterday, rather on a whim, I went through a few of the books on my shelves and jotted down the first three lines from each of them. Well, in most cases it was the first three lines—in a few I did more or less. And then it occurred to me that it might be fun to make a contest out of this. Most of these books are either classics or bestsellers. Most are the kind of books I love to read, though a couple are not. The majority of these books will be familiar to you either because they are on your bookshelves or because you’ve seen them just after walking in to your local Christian bookstore.

So here’s the contest. Send me an email with the book and the author for each of the following selections (and, if you could, make the title of the email “The First Three Lines.” The person who gets the most right will win a $50 gift certificate for Westminster Books. If there is a tie, I’ll just randomly choose one to be the winner. Get to it!


  1. Do you know the painting by Holman Hunt, the leader of the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood, titled The Shadow of Death? It depicts the inside of the carpenter’s shop in Nazareth. Stripped to the waist, Jesus stands by a wooden trestle on which he has put down his saw.”

  2. As clowns yearn to play Hamlet, so I have wanted to write a treatise on God. This book, however, is not it. Its length might suggest that it is trying to be, but anyone who takes it that way will be disappointed.”

  3. This is a serious book about being happy in God. It’s about happiness because that is what our Creator commands: ‘Delight yourself in the LORD!’ (Psalm 37:4). And it is serious because, as Jeremy Taylor said, ‘God threatens terrible things if we will not be happy.’”

  4. A farmer plows his field, sows the seed, and fertilizes and cultivates—all the while knowing that in the final analysis he is utterly dependent on forces outside of himself. He knows he cannot cause the seek to germinate, nor can he produce the rain and sunshine for growing and harvesting the crop. For a successful harvest, he is dependent on these things from God.”

  5. I once listened to an Indian on television say that God was in the wind and the water, and I wondered at how beautiful that was because it meant you could swim in Him or have Him brush your face in a breeze. I am early in my story, but I believe I will stretch out into eternity, and in heaven I will reflect upon these early days, these days when it seemed God was down a dirt road, walking toward me. Years ago He was a swinging speck in the distance; now He is close enough I can hear His singing.”

  6. I know. I almost want to apologize. Dear Lord—do we really need another book for men? Nope. We need soemthing else. We need permission.”

  7. The question before us is what the Christian life, true spirituality, really is, and how it may be lived in a twentieth-century setting.”

  8. If you’re familiar with the life of Charles Haddon Spurgeon, you have probably heard of ‘the Down-Grade Controversy.’ Spurgeon spent the final four years of his life at war against the trends of early modernism, which he rightly saw as a threat to biblical Christianity.”

  9. In a culture that so often rewards the proud—a world quick to admire and applaud the prideful, a world eager to bestow the label ‘great’ on these same individuals—humility occasionally attracts some surprising attention.”

  10. Thanks for picking up this book. Some people never get past the title. ‘My friends won’t touch it,’ one girl told me.”

  11. Bookstores overflow with accounts of near-death and after-death experiences, complete with angels giving guided tours of Heaven. A few of these books may have authentic components, but many are unbiblical and misleading. We Christians who believe God’s Word are partly to blame for this.”

  12. I died on January 18, 1989. Paramedics reached the scene of the accident within minutes. They found no pulse and declared me dead.”

  13. Baseball. Hot dogs. Apple Pie. Chevrolet. These are all things American.”

  14. Sacred cows make the best hamburger, but the meat can be hard to swallow. Christians cherish a mythology that, along with their theology, shapes and directs their lives. Perhaps no myth more strongly influences us than our understanding of how to know the will of God.”

  15. In my basement, behind some bikes and suitcases and boxes, sits a Velvet Elvis. A genuine, bought-by-the-side-of-the-road Velvet Elvis. And to say that this painting captures The King in all his glory would be an understatement.”

May Giveaway - Win a $200 Shopping Spree

Though it has not been long since I closed the last giveaway, it is time already for a new one. And I think you’re going to like this one!

The Sponsor

This month’s sponsor is once again our friends at Monergism Books. Monergism Books exists “to serve the worldwide church by providing the finest classic and contemporary books within the rich tradition of historic Christian orthodoxy. As we carry out our mission, we are committed to providing excellent customer service at a competitive low price, thus creating an exceptional value to our customers.” It is one of those stores you can shop at and know that every title on the virtual shelves will be worth your time.

You can visit them at monergismbooks.com.

The Prizes

This month’s prizes will actually let you build your own prize. We’re giving away gift certificates that are redeemable for anything you’d like to buy from Monergism Books—books, Bibles, commentaries, DVDs, t-shirts, music, tracts…whatever catches your eye.

  • First prize: $200 gift certificate for Monergism Books and a Five Solas t-shirt.
  • Second prize: $75 gift certificate for Monergism Books and a Five Solas t-shirt.
  • Third Prize: $35 gift certificate for Monergism Books and a Five Solas t-shirt.

Increase Your Chances of Winning

As with previous giveaways, you can increase your chances of winning by referring other people to the giveaway. After you have entered the draw, visit the Account Center to find a link you can send to friends or family or church members or neighbors or pets (or post on your blog, at Facebook, or anywhere else that catches your fancy). When others click the link and enter the draw, they increase your chances of winning.

Enter the Draw

You can enter the draw here (And please read the instructions carefully!):

www.challies.com/draw.php